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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. The transmission and control of diabetes is a well-maintained objective in the twenty-first century; prior to understanding the inherent relationship between lifestyle and disease, keeping diabetes in check was both difficult and dangerous where secondary complications were concerned. While the prevalence of cardiovascular disease, vision problems and foot issues still exist within the periphery of diabetes, they can readily be abated when individuals play an integral role in their well being. Now that children have become a large population of what was once primarily an adult disease, the critical nature of self-care is that much more important in transmission and control. Bibliography lists 13 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCdiabchld.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
childhood diabetes in check was both difficult and dangerous where secondary complications are concerned. II. DEFINITION AND DESCRIPTION OF EPIDEMIOLOGY While the prevalence of cardiovascular disease, vision problems and
foot issues still exist within the periphery of diabetes, they can readily be abated when individuals play an integral role in their well being. There is no guarantee who
will develop these secondary complications, inasmuch as the incidence of, for example, cardiovascular disease is directly related to a number of variables that are often controlled by the individual.
The medical industry has no way of definitively predicting which children will develop this particularly dangerous complication, but it is noted that complications "are most likely to occur in someone
who has had diabetes for many years" (Federal Citizen Information Center, 2006). Now that children have become a large population of what was once primarily an adult disease, the
critical nature of self-care is that much more important in transmission and control. III. STEPS AND METHODS OF EPIDEMIOLOGY Risk factors for childhood diabetes include genetic predisposition, diet, weight
and lack of exercise, a triple threat that places control of two out of the three directly in the hands of parents and their capacity to teach their children the
critical need for wholesome and nutrient-rich foods as well as regular physical activity. Children are a product of their environments and, as such, develop much of themselves as a
mirror of what they see. Parents who smoke yet forbid their children to smoke are sending mixed messages that do not validate their words; by the same token, mothers
and fathers who instill healthy attitudes by displaying them do not present themselves as double standards. This is no different from the alarming trend of childhood obesity whereby children
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